Psychologists call them
self-fulfilling prophecies. When people constantly say
negative things, expect the worst, and use terms such as "always"
and "never" regarding their health, relationships, finances, and
life situations in general, these negative predictions often come
true. But is it our minds that
cause them to come true? Or is it something more sinister?

I worked with a woman who
was constantly saying "If it weren't for bad luck, I'd have no luck
at all. Her mother and friends had said this to her as a child. Now,
as an adult, she would say this about herself. It was true that Jane
was accident prone, that she couldn't seem to get ahead financially,
and that all her romantic relationships had gone sour: proof, to
her, that If it weren't for bad luck she'd have no luck at all.

When I addressed whether
Jane, her mother, and her friends had put word curses on Jane
which contributed to her bad luck, spirits manifested by making Jane
feel as if fur were coating her tongue. I explained to Jane that
saying negative things involving the words "always" and "never"
constitute word curses, and demonic spirits are more than willing to
put those curses into effect. Together, in Jesus' name, we cast the
spirits of the word curses away, and Jane began making a supreme
effort not to say or think negative things. As s result, (Thank you,
Father) her luck began to change. It is no longer true that if it
weren't for bad luck Jane would have no luck at all.

I heard of a case in which
a woman was in the habit of saying she would give her right arm if
something she desired would happen. "I'd give my right arm to have a
date with Jack," "I'd give my right arm to be able to play the
piano," "I'd give my right arm for a chance to go a Bon Jovi
concert." Sally got away with it for awhile. But it wasn't long
before she began losing strength in her right arm. Doctors were
unable to diagnose what was happening. Sally eventually lost the use
of her arm.

"What's the use of
dieting?" an overweight couple said. "We've tried them all. Diets
might work for some people, but they never work for us."
These words were a word curse: an open invitation for demonic
spirits to step in, tatter their food and diet, and cause the word
curse to come true. (See page on
Tattering.)

"Mark my words. That boy is
going to have a wreck before he turns eighteen." Jason's grandmother
didn't realize she had just put a word curse on her grandson: a word
curse that was destined to come true.

The Bible tells us that in
Old Testament times God put curses on groups of people who
worshipped other deities or failed to follow His rules. Likewise, in
Bible times, people put curses on each other. Fathers might very
well put a blessing on one son and a curse on the other! The scary
part is that the curses came true. And they weren't curses of
Witchcraft or Voodoo. They were curses born of the spoken word.

Life has enough ups and
downs as it is. Bad things happen to all of us -- to some of us more
than others. But knowing that our words and the words of others can
attract the attention of demonic spirits who are eager and willing
to put word curses into effect should serve as a heads up for all of
us, especially for those who are already victims of demonic
harassment.

"What Demonic
Spirits

Don't Want You
to Know:

What
Traditional Deliverance Ministries Don't Tell You"

To Purchase
e-book in pdf, click book image abov

Also available through Amazon in
Kindle format.

FREE DOWNLOAD
of Betrayed by Her Guardian Angel:

Click book
cover image below.

If you would like to donate toward
the maintenance and upkeep
of this site, please click below. Thank you.